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Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban

Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban
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Aseel Al-Hamad of Saudia Arabia poses for a photo before driving a Lotus Renault E20 Formula One car during a parade before the race (REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier)
Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban
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Aseel Al-Hamad of Saudia Arabia poses for a photo before driving a Lotus Renault E20 Formula One car during a parade before the race (REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier)
Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban
3 / 3
Aseel Al-Hamad of Saudia Arabia poses for a photo before driving a Lotus Renault E20 Formula One car during a parade before the race (REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier)
Updated 24 June 2018

Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban

Ƶn woman drives F1 car to mark end of ban
  • On the same day that women celebrated being allowed to drive on the roads of Ƶ, Aseel Al-Hamad drove an F1 car
  • Al-Hamadwho is a member of the FIA Women in Motorsport Commission, is a keen driver and motorsport enthusiast

LE CASTELLET, France: Renault stole a march on their Formula One rivals on Sunday when they gave a Ƶn woman a chance to mark a special day by driving one of their cars ahead of Sunday’s French Grand Prix.
On the same day that women celebrated being allowed to drive on the roads of Ƶ, Aseel Al-Hamad, the first female member of her national motorsport federation, took the wheel of the same car in which Kimi Raikkonen won the 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

She was part of a Renault ‘passion parade’ hours ahead of the first French Grand Prix in a decade and the first to be held at the Le Castellet circuit for 28 years.
Al-Hamadwho is a member of the FIA Women in Motorsport Commission, is a keen driver and motorsport enthusiast who took part in a training day on June 5 at the circuit.
"I have loved racing and motorsport from a very young age and to drive a Formula One car goes even beyond my dreams and what I thought was possible.

"It is a genuine honour to drive in front of the crowds at the team’s home race in France.
"I hope doing so on the day when women can drive on the roads in the Kingdom of Ƶ shows what you can do if you have the passion and the spirit to dream."
Aseel is responsible for creation of strategies to promote the education and training of women in motorsport in Ƶ.

Al-Hamad had celebrated the end of the ban on women drivers with a lap of honour in a Jaguar F-TYPE.

Al-Hamad, thefirst female board member of the Ƶn Motor Federation, had never driven on a track in her home country before.

Al-Hamad joined Jaguar in a call forJune 24thto be known as World Driving Day – a day when finally, the whole world can enjoy the thrill of being behind the wheel of a car. On World Driving Day Jaguar invites people to share a memory of their best driving moment (image or anecdote) using the #worlddrivingday.